On May 3, 1975, Kings Dominion opened to the public. Situated just
north of Richmond, Virginia, it was
operated by Family Leisure Centers, a joint venture between Top Value Enterprises
and Taft Broadcasting Company, both of Cincinnati, Ohio. Visitors that year
enjoyed five magical lands - International Street, Old Virginia, Coney Island,
The Happy Land of Hanna-Barbera, and Lion Country Safari. The centerpiece
of the park was a 332-foot replica of the Eiffel Tower. In later years,
the animal park was closed.

In 1983, executives with Taft Broadcasting purchased
the theme park division of Taft and formed Kings Entertainment Company (KECO)
with Kings Dominion, Carowinds in Charlotte, Kings Island
in Cincinnati, and Canada's Wonderland in Toronto. California's Great
America was acquired two years later.
Paramount purchased all five parks in 1993, and this park was renamed
Paramount's Kings Dominion. In 2006, Cedar Fair purchased the five Paramount parks for $1.24 billion.
Cedar Fair renamed this one Kings Dominion and presently manages this 400-acre
park.

Hurler closed in 2015 and reopened as Twisted Timbers in 2018 after being converted to a
steel coaster by Rocky Mountain Construction. Five coasters have left the park: Galaxy,
an SDC Galaxi clone, was moved to Myrtle Beach in 1983, but since its whereabouts
now are unknown, it most likely got scrapped. King Cobra was the first Schwarzkopf shuttle
loop and was at Kings Dominion from 1977 to 1986. Since then, it has
operated as King Cobra at the Jolly Roger Amusement Park in Maryland, became
Thunderlooper at Alton Towers in England, and is now Katapul
at Hopi Hari in Brazil. Three coasters pictured below have been removed: Hypersonic XLC
was demolished in January 2008, Shockwave was torn down in late 2015, and Volcano was removed in 2018.